The Political Psychology Lab was strongly represented at the EASP in Krakow 30th June - 4th July 2023.
Lab members contributed with exciting research and poster presentations. Topics included:
Aleksandra Cichocka
“Immigration Restrictions, Collective Narcissism, and Justification of Collective Violence and Extremism”
Karen Douglas
“Identifying important individual- and country-level predictors of conspiracy theorizing: A machine learning analysis”
Stefan Leach
“Identifying national sentiments in language”
Joe Phillips
“When push comes to shove – Who Americans excuse for political violence”
Ben Ruisch
“Asymmetric Extremization: Ideological Enclaves Uniquely Polarize Attitudes Among Political Conservatives”
Nikhil Sengupta
“Reactions to social discontent: From protest to violence”
Hannah Zibell
“It’s the woman’s fault: Blame attributions for friendzone events”
Chiara Zazzarino
“The role of collective nostalgia in predicting policy support through identity processes”
Ricky Green
“Conspiracy theories and online dating: It’s a (mis)match!”
Ramzi Abou Ismail
“Conceptualising and Measuring Support for Collective Violence”
Daniel Toribio Florez
“Belief in conspiracy theories and satisfaction in interpersonal relationships”